II Guerra Mundial - 01 Hands Off A 1942 Canadian poster. Photo: Galerie Bilderwelt/Getty Images Jan 01, 1942
Hitler as an Insatiable Cannibal In this photo: Adolf Hitler Photo: Time & Life Pictures/Time & Life Pictures/Getty Images jan 01, 1942
Modern-Day Nevskys, Unite! A Soviet poster evokes historical heroes Alexander Nevsky, Alexander Suvorov, and Vasily Chapayev. Photo: Time & Life Pictures/Time & Life Pictures/Getty Images Jan 01, 1941
Unwilling Volunteers Photo: Time & Life Pictures/Time & Life Pictures/Getty Images Jan 01, 1942
A poster urging American workers to remain productive in the face of barely human "Huns" and "Japs." Photo: Galerie Bilderwelt/Getty Images Jan 01, 1943
This 1945 poster won a competition organized by the Museum of Modern Art. It was designed by Duane Bryers. In this photo: Adolf Hitler Photo: Keystone/Getty Images
Bible Bashing Photo: MPI/Getty Images Jan 01, 1943
Keep the Ideas Coming Photo: Hulton Archive/Getty Images Jan 01, 1943
Women Love a Submariner Photo: Hulton Archive/Getty Images Jan 01, 1943
Unflinching Enemy Photo: Galerie Bilderwelt/Getty Images Jan 01, 1942
False Liberty A 1944 Italian poster reads, "Behold the liberators!" Photo: Galerie Bilderwelt/Getty Images Jan 01, 1944
All in the Army Now A direct appeal to pure patriotism , American-style. Photo: Hulton Archive/Getty Images Jan 01, 1943
Throttling Hitler A 1942 Soviet poster reads: "The Big Three will tie the enemy in knots." In this photo: Adolf Hitler Photo: Galerie Bilderwelt/Getty Images Jan 01, 1942
Fascist Beast A grotesque German officer drools over the body of a murdered woman, with the words "The Fascist beast kills!" in this 1942 Soviet poster. Photo: Galerie Bilderwelt/Getty Images Jan 01, 1942
Wanted in Prague A graphically striking 1940 Czech poster. In this photo: Adolf Hitler Photo: Galerie Bilderwelt/Getty Images Jan 01, 1940
Here They Come! In war and in peace -- but especially in war -- governments everywhere resort to propaganda, which at its simplest and starkest often takes the form of outrageous posters: occasionally beautiful, sometimes racist, and often brutally jarring.
Bombs Over Berlin Propaganda posters obviously weren't limited to the Axis powers. This 1941 Soviet poster shows a Russian and British pilot celebrating their alliance during a bombing raid over Berlin. Photo: Time & Life Pictures/Time & Life Pictures/Getty
Chumps on the Front This Nazi poster aimed at Allied troops included this caption: "How will you die on the battlefield? Will you be maimed or blinded? The war marches on!" One of history's most insightful critics of propaganda, George Orwell -- himself a pr
Blackout! A 1943 German poster exhorting citizens to keep their lights off at night to hinder Allied bombings reads: "The enemy sees your light! Blackout!" Photo: Galerie Bilderwelt/Getty Images Jan 01, 1943
Hitler Reviews the Troops, 1938 The American soldiers threw open the suitcase that held the Hitler images. Inside, they found a bottle of cognac that Jaeger had placed atop the transparencies. Elated, the soldiers proceeded to share the bottle with Jaeger an
Strength Through Joy An interior swimming pool aboard a "Strength Through Joy" cruise ship, part of the Nazi regime's program of leisure activities. Hitler wanted German workers to receive ample holiday time because, he said, "I want a determined people with
The Original Axis of Evil A boy holds up a sign in Florence during Hitler's May, 1938 state visit to Italy, when he met with Italian dictator and ally Benito Mussolini. Hitler was an early fan of color photography in an age almost completely chronicled in bl
Body of the Nazi Empire Athletes perform during the Reichs Party Congress in 1938, in Nuremberg, Germany. Hitler considered German bodies property of the German empire. Even in his interactions with children, he was seemingly interested mainly in the charact
Worshipping Hitler Between 1936 and 1945, German photographer Hugo Jaeger was granted virtually unlimited access to Adolf Hitler, earnestly chronicling, in color, the Fuhrer at public events and in private moments. (Pictured: Reichstag members salute Hitler
el 3 de septiembre de 1939 Hitler utilizó el ferrrocarril para dirigirse al frente oriental, mientras el Estado Mayor del OKW, incluida su sección más importante, permanecía en Berlín
1914 - Hitler celebra el anunció de que Alemania participaria en la I Guerra Mundial
IwoJima 1945